Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2018 Mar 19;84(7). doi: 10.1128/AEM.02374-17. Print 2018 Apr 1.
Human polyomaviruses are emerging pathogens that infect a large percentage of the human population and are excreted in urine. Consequently, urine that is collected for fertilizer production often has high concentrations of polyomavirus genes. We studied the fate of infectious double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) BK human polyomavirus (BKPyV) in hydrolyzed source-separated urine with infectivity assays and quantitative PCR (qPCR). Although BKPyV genomes persisted in the hydrolyzed urine for long periods of time ( [time required for 90% reduction in infectivity or gene copies] of >3 weeks), the viruses were rapidly inactivated ( of 1.1 to 11 h) in most of the tested urine samples. Interestingly, the infectivity of dsDNA bacteriophage surrogate T3 ( of 24 to 46 days) was much more persistent than that of BKPyV, highlighting a major shortcoming of using bacteriophages as human virus surrogates. Pasteurization and filtration experiments suggest that BKPyV virus inactivation was due to microorganism activity in the source-separated urine, and SDS-PAGE Western blots showed that BKPyV protein capsid disassembly is concurrent with inactivation. Our results imply that stored urine does not pose a substantial risk of BKPyV transmission, that qPCR and infectivity of the dsDNA surrogate do not accurately depict BKPyV fate, and that microbial inactivation is driven by structural elements of the BKPyV capsid. We demonstrate that a common urinary tract virus has a high susceptibility to the conditions in hydrolyzed urine and consequently would not be a substantial exposure route to humans using urine-derived fertilizers. The results have significant implications for understanding virus fate. First, by demonstrating that the dsDNA (double-stranded DNA) genome of the polyomavirus lasts for weeks despite infectivity lasting for hours to days, our work highlights the shortcomings of using qPCR to estimate risks from unculturable viruses. Second, commonly used dsDNA surrogate viruses survived for weeks under the same conditions that BK polyomavirus survived for only hours, highlighting issues with using virus surrogates to predict how human viruses will behave in the environment. Finally, our mechanistic inactivation analysis provides strong evidence that microbial activity drives rapid virus inactivation, likely through capsid disassembly. Overall, our work underlines how subtle structural differences between viruses can greatly impact their environmental fate.
人类多瘤病毒是新兴的病原体,它们感染了很大一部分人口,并在尿液中排泄。因此,用于肥料生产的尿液通常含有高浓度的多瘤病毒基因。我们通过感染性测定和定量聚合酶链反应 (qPCR) 研究了传染性双链 DNA (dsDNA) BK 人类多瘤病毒 (BKPyV) 在水解的源分离尿液中的命运。尽管 BKPyV 基因组在水解尿液中长时间持续存在([传染性降低 90%所需的时间或基因拷贝数]>3 周),但在大多数测试的尿液样本中,病毒很快被灭活(1.1 至 11 小时)。有趣的是,dsDNA 噬菌体 T3 的感染性(24 至 46 天)比 BKPyV 更持久,这突出了使用噬菌体作为人类病毒替代物的一个主要缺点。巴氏消毒和过滤实验表明,BKPyV 病毒失活是由于源分离尿液中的微生物活动所致,SDS-PAGE Western 印迹显示 BKPyV 蛋白衣壳解体与失活同时发生。我们的结果表明,储存的尿液不会构成 BKPyV 传播的实质性风险,qPCR 和 dsDNA 替代物的感染性不能准确描述 BKPyV 的命运,微生物失活是由 BKPyV 衣壳的结构元素驱动的。我们证明,一种常见的尿路病毒对水解尿液中的条件具有很高的敏感性,因此使用尿液衍生的肥料对人类来说不会成为一个实质性的暴露途径。这些结果对理解病毒命运具有重要意义。首先,通过证明多瘤病毒的 dsDNA(双链 DNA)基因组尽管在数小时至数天内具有传染性,但仍能持续数周,我们的工作强调了使用 qPCR 估计无法培养的病毒风险的局限性。其次,在相同条件下,常用的 dsDNA 替代病毒存活了数周,而 BK 多瘤病毒仅存活了数小时,这突出了使用病毒替代物来预测人类病毒在环境中的行为时存在的问题。最后,我们的机制失活动力学分析提供了强有力的证据,证明微生物活性是导致病毒快速失活的原因,可能是通过衣壳解体。总的来说,我们的工作强调了病毒之间细微的结构差异如何极大地影响它们的环境命运。